It started with two Chinese academics earlier this month saying Japan’s claims to the islands were nonsense and that Japan’s annexation of the Ryukyu kingdom in 1879 amounted to an invasion, with the sovereignty still open for debate.

The use of the word “sovereignty” is a real rib tickler that one. Are the Chinese planning on reinstalling the old ruling class and letting them go it alone?

Now, a Chinese general has tossed in his take.

Luo Yuan, a two-star general in the People’s Liberation Army, raised the territorial stakes again this week, saying the Ryukyus had started paying tribute to China in 1372, half a millennium before they were seized by Japan.

Yuan took a nice little stroll on the rhetorical tightrope:

“Let’s for now not discuss whether [the Ryukyus] belong to China, they were certainly China’s tributary state. I am not saying all former tributary states belong to China, but we can say with certainty that the Ryukyus do not belong to Japan.”

Perhaps the islands are just some outcropping in no man’s land and I should lay my claim for a little beachfront property while I can.

Most Korean media outlets running the story used the words “appear to be” in their coverage describing the photos, without taking a clear position on their authenticity.

And, while the Japanese government has, in typical fashion, downplayed the incident and the numbers involved, they have long acknowledged the tragic aftermath that occurred on September 1st, 1923 at the hands of its citizenry.

After the 7.9-magnitude earthquake wrecked Tokyo, Yokohama and other surrounding prefectures, Japanese vigilantes were reported to have murdered thousands of Koreans, whom they blamed for post-quake unrest.

Local Japanese citizens alleged that Koreans (part of a huge labor force brought to Japan during the occupation of Korea) poisoned wells and committed arson and robbery to take advantage of the disaster.

Alleged victims of Japanese massacre following the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake

According to Jeong, his release of the photos comes in response to an announcement by Japanese media late last month that education officials in Tokyo moved to replace the sentence in textbooks that read, “Many Koreans were massacred in the aftermath of the great earthquake,” with “Tombstones commemorating Korean victims of the Great Kanto Earthquake read, ‘Koreans lost their precious lives.'”

Officials felt the term “massacre” would create “misunderstanding.”

Jeong said the move by Japan to alter textbooks forced his hand:

It’s a shameful and humiliating moment in our history, but we have to protect spirits of some 6,000 Korean victims of the massacre. By presenting photos and other pieces of evidence, we must expose brutal acts committed by the Japanese in the past.

Piles of victims following the deadly quake

Noted Korean expat blog ROK Drop wrote: “I do not think is a “smoking gun” because there is no way to know if the bodies are in fact Koreans. They could just be dead civilians pulled from homes and piled up for survivors to look for their dead family members. That however doesn’t explain why their bottoms are exposed as they are laid out on display.”